Roberto Arguello
430 Posts
Roberto Arguello
430 PostsRole
Associate Editor
Experience
6 years
Location
Austin, Texas
Experience
Roberto has been at Action Network for four years as an editor and betting analyst.
Education
Roberto attended Stanford University where he studied economics and art history while hacking on the club golf team.
He also was the voice of Stanford football during the 2017 and 2018 seasons on KZSU 90.1 FM while calling several other sports and hosting a weekly sports talk radio show for four years.
Specialties
Finding the best boosted parlays at popular sportsbooks.
More from Roberto Arguello

Clippers vs. Kings Preview: Back a Healthy Paul George and the Clippers
Roberto Arguello
Mar 4, 2022 UTC

Bucks vs. Heat Preview: Can Giannis Antetokounmpo and Milwaukee Keep Rolling?
Roberto Arguello
Mar 4, 2022 UTC

Nuggets vs. Heat Preview: How to Approach Potential Injuries in Monday's Matchup
Roberto Arguello
Mar 4, 2022 UTC

Wizards vs. Heat Preview: How to Bet this Southeast Division Clash
Roberto Arguello
Jan 13, 2025 UTC

Arizona State vs. Washington: Can Sun Devils Run Away from Huskies?
Roberto Arguello
Mar 4, 2022 UTC

Hornets vs. Lakers Preview: Back Charlotte With Injury Concerns Looming
Roberto Arguello
Mar 4, 2022 UTC

Heat vs. Mavericks Preview: Can Miami Remain Dominant on the Road?
Roberto Arguello
Jan 7, 2025 UTC

Heat vs. Hornets Preview: Miami's Elite Defense Gives Over/Under Value
Roberto Arguello
Jan 6, 2025 UTC

Trail Blazers vs. Clippers Preview: The Live Bet to Make in Monday's Matchup
Roberto Arguello
Jan 13, 2025 UTC

Heat vs. Pacers Preview: Keep Fading Indiana Against Fresh Miami Squad
Roberto Arguello
Jan 6, 2025 UTC

Bucks vs. Heat Preview: Back the Heat Against the Shorthanded Bucks
Roberto Arguello
Jan 6, 2025 UTC
Betting Highlights
Favorite Bet of All-Time
Taylor Moore 70-1 at the 2023 Valspar Championship for my first outright winner on the Links + Locks podcast.
Most Heartbreaking Bet
Collin Morikawa to win the 2023 Sentry of Champions at +2000 was my worst beat of my career. Morikawa held a six-shot lead after 54 holes and was leading the eventual winner, Jon Rahm, by as many as nine shots during the final round before falling apart down the stretch. This tied the largest 54-hole collapse in PGA Tour history.

















